ID | #1552649155 |
Added | Fri, 15/03/2019 |
Author | July N. |
Sources | |
Phenomena | |
Status | Result
|
Resume |
Initial data
5 January 2019, 18:39, the witness photographed the amazing bell-shaped UFO over the town of Fassett in the Outaouais area of Quebec.
Indications:
"I was shooting the sunset, and already in my photos I noticed an object that I couldn't see with the naked eye."
Translated by «Yandex.Translator»
Original news
Le 5 janvier 2019, à 18h39, un témoin a photographié un étonnant OVNI en forme de cloche au-dessus de la municipalité de Fassett, dans la région de l’Outaouais, au Québec.
Témoignage :
« Je prenais des photos du coucher de soleil et après j’ai remarqué cet objet sur mes photos que je ne voyais pas a l’œil nu et qui n’était plus la sur les photos suivante. »
Ce n’est pas la première fois qu’un OVNI est observé dans cette région canadienne. En décembre 2012, un automobiliste avait rapporté avoir vu un OVNI cylindrique dans la municipalité de Low.
Hypotheses
Re-reflections in lens lenses from a strong light source
The lens consists of a set of lenses (in some lenses - of mirrors), designed for mutual compensation of aberrations and assembled into a single system.
From the contour light (bright light sources behind the subject or next to it), caught in the frame or located outside the frame, parasitic reflections from the internal elements of the lens are formed, called glare (or in slang "hares").
Investigation
The appearance of the object (the inverted picture of the sun peeking through the clouds), its location, and also the comment of the witness, about a hundred, that the object was observed visually, gives the right to assume that it's the glare from the sun.
Translated by «Yandex.Translator»
Resume
Re-reflections in lens lenses from a strong light source
The lens consists of a set of lenses (in some lenses - of mirrors), designed for mutual compensation of aberrations and assembled into a single system.
From the contour light (bright light sources behind the subject or next to it), caught in the frame or located outside the frame, parasitic reflections from the internal elements of the lens are formed, called glare (or in slang "hares").
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